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OverviewThis book demonstrates that the basic concepts of the three volumes of Capital come under different categories of time. Capitalist relations emerge as a definite organization of social time that obeys its own intrinsic criteria and operates as an autonomous, social subject. Reading Capital from this perspective, it becomes possible to restore its dialectical (Hegelian) logic. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Stavros TombazosPublisher: Haymarket Books Imprint: Haymarket Books Volume: Volume 61 Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.491kg ISBN: 9781608464159ISBN 10: 1608464156 Pages: 334 Publication Date: 17 March 2015 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Temporarily unavailable ![]() The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you. Table of ContentsReviewsWith time as his starting point, Stavros Tombazos sheds light on the general intelligibility of Capital and the originality of its own logic... A frequent critique directed at Marx is that he remains tributary of the determinist epistemology of his time. This work draws our attention to an opposite tendency of his thought, ready to welcome the contemporary developments of fuzzy logic, chaos theory, the unity between chance and necessity. --Daniel Bensaid The title of this book could have been Reading Capital, had this title not already been used: reading the whole of Capital, with a scrupulous loyalty to the order of its reasons... 'Time' appears as the most adequate consideration with respect to this aim, to be precise the successive times intersecting and over-determining each other... The exposition of the theory of fetishism forms the core of Tombazos's work. I believe that, of the entire literature dedicated to this issue, Tombazos's elucidation is the best. --George Labica With time as his starting point, Stavros Tombazos sheds light on the general intelligibility of Capital and the originality of its own logic... A frequent critique directed at Marx is that he remains tributary of the determinist epistemology of his time. This work draws our attention to an opposite tendency of his thought, ready to welcome the contemporary developments of fuzzy logic, chaos theory, the unity between chance and necessity. --Daniel Bensaid Time in Marx constitutes a significant and original contribution to the ongoing debate over the relationship between Hegel and Marx...[it] is replete with interesting insights into many aspects of Marx's work. Particularly worthy of note are his remarks on the non-equilibrium character of Marx's value theory, his analysis of the determinations of socially-necessary labour-time, and a six page assessment of Marx on ground-rent which is a model of clarity --Pete Green, Marx and Philosophy Review of Books The title of this book could have been Reading Capital, had this title not already been used: reading the whole of Capital, with a scrupulous loyalty to the order of its reasons... 'Time' appears as the most adequate consideration with respect to this aim, to be precise the successive times intersecting and over-determining each other... The exposition of the theory of fetishism forms the core of Tombazos's work. I believe that, of the entire literature dedicated to this issue, Tombazos's elucidation is the best. --George Labica With time as his starting point, Stavros Tombazos sheds light on the general intelligibility of Capital and the originality of its own logic... A frequent critique directed at Marx is that he remains tributary of the determinist epistemology of his time. This work draws our attention to an opposite tendency of his thought, ready to welcome the contemporary developments of fuzzy logic, chaos theory, the unity between chance and necessity. --Daniel Bensa d Time in Marx constitutes a significant and original contribution to the ongoing debate over the relationship between Hegel and Marx...[it] is replete with interesting insights into many aspects of Marx's work. Particularly worthy of note are his remarks on the non-equilibrium character of Marx's value theory, his analysis of the determinations of socially-necessary labour-time, and a six page assessment of Marx on ground-rent which is a model of clarity --Pete Green, Marx and Philosophy Review of Books The title of this book could have been Reading Capital, had this title not already been used: reading the whole of Capital, with a scrupulous loyalty to the order of its reasons... 'Time' appears as the most adequate consideration with respect to this aim, to be precise the successive times intersecting and over-determining each other... The exposition of the theory of fetishism forms the core of Tombazos's work. I believe that, of the entire literature dedicated to this issue, Tombazos's elucidation is the best. --George Labica Author InformationStavros Tombazos Ph.D. (1991), Universite Paris 8, is Assistant Professor of Political Economy at the University of Cyprus. He has published numerous books and articles on the thought of Hegel and Marx, on Globalisation, the European Integration and Capitalist Crises. His latest book, published in Greek, is titled: Centrifugal Times, The World Economic Crisis 2007, 2008, 2009 (Papazisis, 2010). He is a regular contributor to the French journals Contretemps and Lignes Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |